I think the videos you've seen are for removing the remjet coating on cine films like Visions3. Cinestill's bread and butter is their process for removing that coating without damaging the film or exposing it to light, allowing them to then load it into cassettes or roll it on 120 spools for still camera use.
I think it's pretty unlikely you or I will manage that, but the good news is, there's no need for it with C-41 films (which are made for still cameras, not cine); they don't have remjet. The only still film I'm aware of that had remjet was Kodachrome, and it's been out of production for so long that the last lab that could give it the original process closed its line more than a decade ago.
For other film, antihalation is divided into two broad categories: dyes, either in a subcoat between the emulsion proper and the film base or on the "base": side of the film, colored base, or a colloidal silver layer (again, usually in a sub coating, and mainly seen as the yellow filter layer in color films, or as antihalation in in B&W cine films intended for reversal processing). Except for a colored base (like the gray base in Tri-X), antihalation is generally intended to be removed by the specified process for a particular film, so becomes significant to us only if we cross-process the film in a way that doesn't do that -- like shooting Foma R100 for negatives or processing most C-41 films in B&W chemistry.
For C-41 film processed in C-41 chemistry, the bleach and fix steps remove the filter layer along with the developed silver and undeveloped halide. You don't have to do anything beyond follow the steps in the C-41 kit, or pay a competent lab to process your film.